Can anybody give me a hand and take a look [url=http://images.google.com.br/images?svnum=10&hl=pt-BR&lr=&q=p%C3%A3o+de+forma[]here[/url] (especially the second picture) and tell me what is the name in English? We call it pão de forma, bread of mould (forma pronounced with a closed o, not to be mistaken for forma with an open o, meaning form or shape. Some writers differentiate the two by writing the first as fôrma. Just for your information. ).

Brazilian dude wrote:Can anybody give me a hand and take a look [url=http://images.google.com.br/images?svnum=10&hl=pt-BR&lr=&q=p%C3%A3o+de+forma[]here[/url] (especially the second picture) and tell me what is the name in English? We call it pão de forma, bread of mould (forma pronounced with a closed o, not to be mistaken for forma with an open o, meaning form or shape. Some writers differentiate the two by writing the first as fôrma. Just for your information. ).

Brazilian dude

Are you talking about the second picture from the left on the top row? White bread (or Pan Blanco). That's what it looks like to me. A loaf of sliced white bread. Or "a loaf of bread" as we say. The second picture on left going down is a sandwich (or emparedado?) Does that help?

"What lies behind us and what lies ahead of us are tiny matters compaired to what lies inside us." R.W.E.

Dude, this map shows a couple (actual) cities close to where an old friend worked: Plano and Sandwich. His story goes that they're planning to add another town between them, called Bologna. (And they'll probably be using the type of bread you asked about.)
-gailr

gailr wrote:Dude, this map shows a couple (actual) cities close to where an old friend worked: Plano and Sandwich. His story goes that they're planning to add another town between them, called Bologna. (And they'll probably be using the type of bread you asked about.)-gailr

Gail, your link dint work but it all sounds so cheesy.
Lettuce hope this idea doesn't spread.